From Commander, Submarine Forces Public Affairs
NORFOLK (NNS) -- Commander, Submarine Forces (COMSUBFOR)
announced Virginia-class attack submarine USS New Mexico (SSN 779) and Los
Angeles-class attack submarine USS Hampton (SSN 767) commenced Ice Exercise
2014 (ICEX 2014) in the Arctic Ocean March 19.
USS New Mexico is homeported in Groton, Conn., and commanded
by Cmdr. Todd Moore, while USS Hampton is homeported in San Diego, and
commanded by Cmdr. Lincoln Reifsteck.
The two submarines will conduct testing on submarine
operations in Arctic waters.
"In keeping with the Department of Defense's Arctic
Objectives, the Submarine Force uses Ice Exercises to prepare for a wide range
of challenges and contingencies," said Capt. Paul Whitescarver, the camp's
officer in tactical command and operations officer at Commander, Submarine
Force Atlantic.
"The Arctic environment is a tough place to operate, so
there is no substitute for assessing our current capability and determining
future requirements than to physically operate in the arctic. Our presence in
the region coupled with the training that our submarine crews will participate
in during ICEX 2014 ensures that our interests in the region will stay secure,
support future safety and promote defense cooperation with many of our state
partners."
The overall exercise has been planned and will be
coordinated by the Navy's Arctic Submarine Laboratory (ASL) located at Naval
Base Point Loma in San Diego. A temporary ice camp and tracking range will be
built into the ice flow North of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. The U.S. Navy Ice Camp
NAUTILUS consists of a small village, constructed and operated especially for
the ICEX by members of the U.S., Canadian, and British navies.
U.S. submarines must continue to train in the Arctic
environment to refine and validate procedures and required equipment, as the
Arctic Ocean serves as a route for submarines to transit between the Atlantic
and Pacific Oceans. The U.S. Submarine Force conducts these exercises in the
Arctic in order to assure continued access to this unique region.
Submarines have conducted under-ice operations in the Arctic
regions in support of inter-fleet transit, training, cooperative allied
engagements and operations for more than 50 years. USS Nautilus (SSN 571) made
the first transit in 1958. USS Skate (SSN 578) was the first U.S. submarine to
surface through arctic ice at the North Pole in March 1959. Since those events,
the U.S. Submarine Force has completed more than 120 Arctic exercises with the
last being conducted in 2012. The last ice camp was established in 2011. Since
1987, most of these have been conducted in conjunction with Royal Navy
submarines.
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